MANDRICARDO, having completed his story now turned to
Rogero, and proposed that arms should decide which of the
two was most worthy to bear the symbol of the Trojan
knight.
Rogero felt no other objection to this proposal than
the scruple which arose on observing that his antagonist
was without a sword. Mandricardo insisted that this need
be no impediment, since his oath prevented him from using
a sword until he should have achieved the conquest of
Durindana.
This was no sooner said than a new antagonist started
up in Gradasso, who now accompanied Mandricardo. Gradasso
vindicated his prior right to Durindana, to obtain which
he had embarked (as was related in the beginning) in that
bold inroad upon France. A quarrel was thus kindled
between the kings of Tartary and Sericane. While the
dispute was raging, a knight arrived upon the ground,
accompanied by a damsel, to whom Rogero related the cause
of the strife. The knight was Florismart, and his
companion Flordelis. Florismart succeeded in bringing the
two champions to accord, by informing them that he could
bring them to the presence of Orlando, the master of
Durindana.
Gradasso and Mandricardo readily made truce, in order
to accompany Florismart, nor would Rogero be left behind.
As they proceeded on their quest, they were met by a
dwarf, who entreated their assistance in behalf of his
lady, who had been carried off by an enchanter, mounted on
a winged horse. However unwilling to leave the question of
the sword undecided, it was not possible for the knights
to resist this appeal. Two of their number, Gradasso and
Rogero, therefore accompanied the dwarf, Mandricardo
persisted in his search for Orlando, and, Florismart, with
Flordelis, pursued their way to the camp of Charlemagne.
Atlantes, the enchanter, who had brought up Rogero, and
cherished for him the warmest affection, knew by his art
that his pupil was destined to be severed from him, and
converted to the Christian faith through the influence of
Bradamante, that royal maiden with whom chance had brought
him acquainted. Thinking to thwart the will of Heaven in
this respect, he now put forth all his arts to entrap
Rogero into his power. By the aid of his subservient
demons, he reared a castle on an inaccessible height, in
the Pyrenean mountains, and, to make it a pleasant abode
to his pupil, contrived to entrap and convey thither
knights and damsels many a one, whom chance had brought
into the vicinity of his castle. Here, in a sort of
sensual paradise, they were but too willing to forget
glory and duty, and to pass their time in indolent
enjoyment.
It was by the enchanter that the dwarf had now been
sent to tempt the knights into his power.
But we must now return to Rinaldo, whom we left
interrupted in his combat with Rodomont. In search of his
late antagonist, and intent on bringing their combat to a
decision, he entered the forest of Arden, whither he
suspected Rodomont had gone. While engaged on this quest,
he was surprised by the vision of a beautiful child
dancing naked, with three damsels as beautiful as himself.
While he was lost in admiration at the sight, the child
approached him, and, throwing at him handfuls of roses and
lilies, struck him from his horse. He was no sooner down
than he was seized by the dancers, by whom he was dragged
about and scourged with flowers till he fell into a swoon.
When he began to revive, one of the group approached him,
and told him that his punishment was the consequence of
his rebellion against that power before whom all things
bend; that there was but one remedy to heal the wounds
that had been inflicted, and that was to drink of the
waters of Love. Then they left him.
Rinaldo, sore and faint, dragged himself toward a
fountain which flowed near by, and, being parched with
thirst, drank greedily and almost unconsciously of the
water, which was sweet to the taste, but bitter at the
heart. After repeated draughts he recovered his strength
and recollection, and found himself in the same place
where Angelica had formerly awakened him with a rain of
flowers, and whence he had fled in contempt of her
courtesy.
This remembrance of the scene was followed by the
recognition of his crime; and, repenting bitterly his
ingratitude, he leaped upon Bayard, with the intention of
hastening to Angelica's country, and soliciting his pardon
at her feet.
Let us now retrace our steps, and revert to the time
when the paladins, having learned from Dudon the summons
of Charlemagne to return to France to repel the invaders,
had all obeyed the command with the exception of Orlando,
whose passion for Angelica still held him in attendance on
her. Orlando, arriving before Albracca, found it closely
beleaguered. He, however, made his way into the citadel,
and related his adventures to Angelica, from the time of
his departure up to his separation from Rinaldo and the
rest, when they departed to the assistance of Charlemagne.
Angelica, in return, described the distresses of the
garrison, and the force of the besiegers; and in
conclusion prayed Orlando to favor her escape from the
pressing danger, and escort her into France. Orlando, who
did not suspect that love for Rinaldo was her secret
motive, joyfully agreed to the proposal, and the sally was
resolved upon.
Leaving lights burning in the fortress, they departed
at nightfall, and passed in safety through the enemy's
camp. After encountering numerous adventures, they reached
the sea-side, and embarked on board a pinnace for France.
The vessel arrived safely, and the travellers,
disembarking in Provence, pursued their way by land. One
day, heated and weary, they sought shelter from the sun in
the forest of Arden, and chance directed Angelica to the
fountain of Disdain, of whose waters she eagerly drank.
Issuing thence, the Count and damsel encountered a
stranger knight. It was no other than Rinaldo, who was
just on the point of setting off on a pilgrimage in search
of Angelica, to implore her pardon for his insensibility,
and urge his new-found passion. Surprise and delight at
first deprived him of utterance, but soon recovering
himself, he joyfully saluted her, claiming her as his, and
exhorting her to put herself under his protection. His
presumption was repelled by Angelica with disdain, and
Orlando, enraged at the invasion of his rights, challenged
him to decide their claims by arms.
Terrified at the combat which
ensued, Angelica fled amain through the forest, and came
out upon a plain covered with tents. This was the camp of
Charlemagne, who led the army of reserve destined to
support the troops which had advanced to oppose Marsilius.
Charles, having heard the damsel's tale, with difficulty
separated the two cousins, and then consigned Angelica, as
the cause of quarrel, to the care of Namo, Duke of
Bavaria, promising that she should be his who should best
deserve her in the impending battle.
But these plans and hopes were frustrated. The
Christian army, beaten at all points, fled from the
Saracens; and Angelica, indifferent to both her lovers,
mounted a swift palfrey and plunged into the forest,
rejoicing, in spite of her terror, at having regained her
liberty. She stopped at last in a tufted grove, where a
gentle zephyr blew, and whose young trees were watered by
two clear runnels, which came and mingled their waters,
making a pleasing murmur. Believing herself far from
Rinaldo, and overcome by fatigue and the summer heat, she
saw with delight a bank covered with flowers, so thick
that they almost hid the green turf, inviting her to
alight and rest. She dismounted from her palfrey, and
turned him loose to recruit his strength with the tender
grass which bordered the streamlets. Then, in a sheltered
nook tapestried with moss and fenced in with roses and
hawthorn-flowers, she yielded herself to grateful repose.
[source: Orlando
Furioso, Canto One, XXXIII - XXXVIII]
She had not slept long when she was awakened by the
noise made by the approach of a horse. Starting up she saw
an armed knight who had arrived at the bank of the stream.
Not knowing whether he was to be feared or not, her heart
beat with anxiety. She pressed aside the leaves to allow
her to see who it was, but scarce dared to breathe for
fear of betraying herself. Soon the knight threw himself
on the flowery bank, and, leaning his head on his hand,
fell into a profound reverie. Then arousing himself from
his silence, be began to pour forth complaints, mingled
with deep sighs. Rivers of tears flowed down his cheeks,
and his breast seemed to labor with a hidden flame.
"Ah, vain regrets!" he exclaimed; "cruel
fortune! others triumph, while I endure hopeless misery!
Better a thousand times to lose life, than wear a chain so
disgraceful and so oppressive!"
Angelica by this time had recognized the stranger, and
perceived that it was Sacripant, king of Circassia, one of
the worthiest of her suitors. This prince had followed
Angelica from his country, at the very gates of the day,
to France, where he heard with dismay that she was under
the guardianship of the Paladin Orlando, and that the
Emperor had announced his decree to award her as the prize
of valor to that one of his nephews who should best
deserve her.
[source: Orlando
Furioso, Canto One, XXXVIII - XLVIII]
As Sacripant continued to lament, Angelica, who had
always opposed the hardness of marble to his sighs,
thought with herself that nothing forbade her employing
his good offices in this unhappy crisis. Though firmly
resolved never to accept him as a spouse, she yet felt the
necessity of giving him a gleam of hope in reward for the
service she required of him. All at once, like Diana, she
stepped forth from the arbor. "May the gods preserve
thee," she said, "and put far from thee all hard
thoughts of me!" Then she told him all that had
befallen her since she parted with him at her father's
court, and how she had availed herself of Orlando's
protection to escape from the beleaguered city. At that
moment the noise of horse and armor was heard as of one
approaching; and Sacripant, furious at the interruption,
resumed his helmet, mounted his horse, and placed his
lance in rest. He saw a knight advancing, with scarf and
plume of snowy whiteness. Sacripant regarded him with
angry eyes, and, while he was yet some distance off,
defied him to the combat. The other, not moved by his
angry tone to make reply, put himself on his defence.
Their horses, struck at the same moment with the spur,
rushed upon one another with the impetuosity of a tempest,
Their shields were pierced each with the other's lance,
and only the temper of their breastplates saved their
lives. Both the horses recoiled with the violence of the
shock; but the unknown knight's recovered itself at the
touch of the spur; the Saracen king's fell dead, and bore
down his master with him. The white knight, seeing his
enemy in this condition, cared not to renew the combat,
but, thinking he had done enough for glory, pursued his
way through the forest and was a mile off before Sacripant
had got free from his horse.
[source: Orlando
Furioso, Canto One, XLIX - LXIV]
As a ploughman, stunned by a thunder-clap which has
stricken dead the oxen at his plough, stands motionless,
sadly contemplating his loss, so Sacripant stood
confounded and overwhelmed with mortification at having
Angelica a witness of his defeat. He groaned, he sighed,
less from the pain of his bruises than for the shame of
being reduced to such a state before her. The princess
took pity on him, and consoled him as well as she could.
"Banish your regrets, my lord," she said,
"this accident has happened solely in consequence of
the feebleness of your horse, which had more need of rest
and food than of such an encounter as this. Nor can your
adversary gain any credit by it, since he has hurried
away, not venturing a second trial." While she thus
consoled Sacripant they perceived a person approach, who
seemed a courier, with bag and horn. As soon as he came
up, he accosted Sacripant, and inquired if he had seen a
knight pass that way, bearing a white shield and with a
white plume to his helmet. "I have, indeed, seen too
much of him," said Sacripant, "it is he who has
brought me to the ground; but at least I hope to learn
from you who that knight is." "That I can easily
inform you," said the man; "know then that, if
you have been overthrown, you owe your fate to the high
prowess of a lady as beautiful as she is brave. It is the
fair and illustrious Bradamante who has won from you the
honors of victory."
[source: Orlando
Furioso, Canto One, LXV - LXX]
At these words the courier rode on his way, leaving
Sacripant more confounded and mortified than ever. In
silence he mounted the horse of Angelica, taking the lady
behind him on the croup, and rode away in search of a more
secure asylum. Hardly had they ridden two miles when a new
sound was heard in the forest, and they perceived a
gallant and powerful horse, which, leaping the ravines and
dashing aside the branches that opposed his passage,
appeared before them, accoutred with a rich harness
adorned with gold.
[source: Orlando
Furioso, Canto One, LXXI - LXXII]
"If I may believe my eyes, which penetrate with
difficulty the underwood," said Angelica, "that
horse that dashes so stoutly through the bushes is Bayard,
and I marvel how he seems to know the need we have of him,
mounted as we are both on one feeble animal."
Sacripant, dismounting from the palfrey, approached the
fiery courser, and attempted to seize his bridle, but the
disdainful animal, turning from him, launched at him a
volley of kicks enough to have shattered a wall of marble.
Bayard then approached Angelica with an air as gentle and
loving as a faithful dog could his master, after a long
separation. For he remembered how she had caressed him,
and even fed him, in Albracca. She took his bridle in her
left hand, while with her right she patted his neck. The
beautiful animal, gifted with wonderful intelligence,
seemed to submit entirely. Sacripant, seizing the moment
to vault upon him, controlled his curvetings, and
Angelica, quitting the croup of the palfrey, regained her
seat.
[source: Orlando
Furioso, Canto One, LXXIII - LXXVI]
But, turning his eyes toward a place where was heard a
noise of arms, Sacripant beheld Rinaldo. That hero now
loves Angelica more than his life, and she flies him as
the timid crane the falcon.
The fountain of which Angelica had drunk produced such
an effect on the beautiful queen, that, with distressed
countenance and trembling voice, she conjured Sacripant
not to wait the approach of Rinaldo, but to join her in
flight.
"Am I, then," said Sacripant, "of so
little esteem with you that you doubt my power to defend
you? Do you forget the battle of Albracca, and how, in
your defence, I fought single-handed against Agrican and
all his knights?"
Angelica made no reply, uncertain what to do; but
already Rinaldo was too near to be escaped. He advanced
menacingly to the Circassian king, for he recognized his
horse.
[source: Orlando
Furioso, Canto One, LXXVII - LXXXI]
"Vile thief," he cried,
"dismount from that horse, and prevent the punishment
that is your due for daring to rob me of my property.
Leave, also, the princess in my hands; for it would indeed
be a sin to suffer so charming a lady and so gallant a
charger to remain in such keeping."
The king of Circassia, furious at being thus insulted,
cried out, "Thou liest, villain, in giving me the
name of thief, which better belongs to thyself than to me.
It is true, the beauty of this lady and the perfection of
this horse are unequalled; come on, then, and let us try
which of us is most worthy to possess them."
[source: Orlando
Furioso, Canto Two, III - IV]
At these words the king of Circassia and Rinaldo
attacked one another with all their force, one fighting on
foot, the other on horseback. You need not, however,
suppose that the Saracen king found any advantage in this;
for a young page, unused to horsemanship, could not have
failed more completely to manage Bayard than did this
accomplished knight. The faithful animal loved his master
too well to injure him, and refused his aid as well as his
obedience to the hand of Sacripant, who could strike but
ineffectual blows, the horse backing when he wished him to
go forward, and dropping his head and arching his back,
throwing out with his legs, so as almost to shake the
knight out of the saddle. Sacripant, seeing that he could
not manage him, watched his opportunity, rose on his
saddle, and leapt lightly to the earth; then, relieved
from the embarrassment of the horse, renewed the combat on
more equal terms. Their skill to thrust and parry was
equal; one rises, the other stoops; with one foot set
firm, they turn and wind, to lay on strokes or to dodge
them. At last Rinaldo, throwing himself on the Circassian,
dealt him a blow so terrible that Fusberta, his good
sword, cut in two the buckler of Sacripant, although it
was made of bone, and covered with a thick plate of steel
well tempered. The arm of the Saracen was deprived of its
defence, and almost palsied with the stroke. Angelica,
perceiving how victory was likely to incline, and
shuddering at the thought of becoming the prize of
Rinaldo, hesitated no longer. Turning her horse's head,
she fled with the utmost speed; and, in spite of the round
pebbles which covered a steep descent, she plunged into a
deep valley, trembling with the fear that Rinaldo was in
pursuit. At the bottom of this valley she encountered an
aged hermit, whose white beard flowed to his middle, and
whose venerable appearance seemed to assure his piety.
[source: Orlando
Furioso, Canto Two, V - XIII]
This hermit, who appeared shrunk by age and fasting,
travelled slowly, mounted upon a wretched ass. The
princess, overcome with fear, conjured him to save her
life, and to conduct her to some port of the sea, whence
she might embark and quit France, never more to hear the
odious name of Rinaldo.
The old hermit was something of a wizard. He comforted
Angelica, and promised to protect her from all peril. Then
he opened his scrip, and took from thence a book, and had
read but a single page when a goblin, obedient to his
incantations, appeared, under the form of a laboring man,
and demanded his orders. He received them, transported
himself to the place where the knights still maintained
their conflict, and boldly stepped between the two.
"Tell me, I pray you," he said, "what
benefit will accrue to him who shall get the better in
this contest? The object you are contending for is already
disposed of; for the Paladin Orlando, without effort and
without opposition, is now carrying away the princess
Angelica to Paris. You had better pursue them promptly,
for if they reach Paris, you will never see her
again."
[source: Orlando
Furioso, Canto Two, XIV - XVII]
At these words you might have seen those rival warriors
confounded, stupefied, silently agreeing that they were
affording their rival a fair opportunity to triumph over
them. Rinaldo, approaching Bayard, breathes a sigh of
shame and rage, and swears a terrible oath that, if he
overtakes Orlando, he will tear his heart out. Then
mounting Bayard and pressing his flanks with his spurs, he
leaves the king of Circassia on foot in the forest.
[source: Orlando
Furioso, Canto Two, XVIII - XIX]
Let it not appear strange that Rinaldo found Bayard
obedient at last, after having so long prevented any one
from even touching his bridle; for that fine animal had an
intelligence almost human; he had fled from his master
only to draw him on the track of Angelica, and enable him
to recover her. He saw when the princess fled from the
battle, and Rinaldo being then engaged in a fight on foot,
Bayard found himself free to follow the traces of
Angelica. Thus he had drawn his master after him, not
permitting him to approach, and had brought him to the
sight of the princess.
But Bayard now, deceived like his master with the false
intelligence of the goblin, submits to be mounted and to
serve his master as usual, and Rinaldo, animated with
rage, makes him fly toward Paris, more slowly than his
wishes, though the speed of Bayard outstripped the winds.
Full of impatience to encounter Orlando, he gave but a few
hours that night to sleep. Early the next day he saw
before him the great city, under the walls of which the
Emperor Charles had collected the scattered remains of his
army. Foreseeing that he would soon be attacked on all
sides, the Emperor had caused the ancient fortifications
to be repaired, and new ones to be built, surrounded by
wide and deep ditches. The desire to hold the field
against the enemy made him seize every means of procuring
new allies. He hoped to receive from England aid
sufficient to enable him to form a new camp, and as soon
as Rinaldo rejoined him, he selected him to go as his
ambassador into England, to plead for auxiliaries. Rinaldo
was far from pleased with this commission, but he obeyed
the Emperor's commands, without giving himself time to
devote a single day to the object nearest to his heart. He
hastened to Calais, and lost not a moment in embarking for
England, ardently desiring a hasty despatch of his
commission, and a speedy return to France.
[source: Orlando
Furioso, Canto Two, XX - XXVII]